4 Steps to Defining Your Startups's Culture (and Why It's Important)

4 Steps to Defining Your Startups's Culture (and Why It's Important)

Almost two years in, we couldn’t be prouder of the team we’ve put together. Cliche perhaps, but 100% true: team is everything. It drives the quality of our product, the delight of our customers, our ability to keep hiring top talent, and — most importantly — how rewarding it feels to be in the trenches together day-in day-out

We realized recently that, while our culture drives everything we do, we haven’t documented it anywhere. If someone asked each of us how we’d describe our culture, our descriptions would look something like an atom; distinct perspectives centered around a shared nucleus containing all the real weight.

We wanted to bring definition to that nucleus: how do we collectively describe the core of what it means to be on this team?

Step 1: Idea Collection

All of our teammates were given post-it notes to jot down thoughts in response to four high-level questions:

What are you motivated by?

What do you enjoy doing?

What makes us great?

What do we want to achieve?

These questions were meant only to spur thoughts. Of course there’s a lot of overlap between those questions, and they are by no means exhaustive.

For about 10 minutes we contributed our ideas.

It was awesome to see how how much overlap emerged from the team:

“Smart, A-player team”

“Dedicated, extremely talented people”

“A bunch of super-talented swiss army knives”

“Working with committed, dedicated people”

Step 2: Voting

With so many great contributions on the whiteboard, our next step was to surface the ones that resonated strongest. Each teammate was given five stickers; you could vote on five different post-its (including your own) or put multiple stars on the same post-it.

It got a little crowded around the whiteboard, but it’s essential that we all do this at the same time, in order to minimize the effect of previous votes on your voting.

It helps to have someone read off all the post-its beforehand, so people have a general sense of what’s up there.

Step 3: Consolidation

At this point, one person needs to drive but it’s still a team effort: consolidate all the starred post-its around common themes. Simply cluster them on the whiteboard. The whole team should help suggest what goes where, and simultaneously suggest the common themes, which can be written above each cluster.

We kept it to one word per cluster, but you can use phrases; up to your team!

Step 4: Your Culture, Summarized

That’s pretty much it. We all took a step back and marveled at the breadth of and overlap in our definitions of what drives us.

Here’s what we came to — our definition of the nucleus of DataFox’s culture:

We care about building a team of high-performers, covering each other’s backs, constantlylearning, and delighting our customers by solvinghard problems.

Teamwork

We want our teammates to succeed and we go out of our way to help them.

We want our teammates to feel valued and engaged.

We celebrate the victories, big and small.

We love working with committed, dedicated, extremely talented people.

We care about advancing the team with every hire.

Constant Learning

We care about agility and constant improvement.

We care about autonomy.

We want to make something we’re proud of.

Solving Hard Problems

We thrive in solving complicated problems with software.

We enjoy automating awful manual work for others.

We care about building a reputation for technical excellence.

Delighting our Customers

We work to uncover our customers’ pains, and then delight them with our solutions.

Being a flat, streamlined team allows us to jump on projects and get them done very quickly.

We’re motivated to clean messy data (seriously).

We strive for financial independence, by building a product that our customer want to pay for.

This is just a work-in-progress, a first cut. Like everything we do, we expect to come back to this often, to make it better and better and account for things we learn along the way.

Still, there’s something exhilarating about getting these values down on “paper,” as it gives shape to sentiments that we feel, working on this team together, but can’t always readily put into words.

PS: we’re looking for new teammates to join us. Check out our openings here and shoot us an email if you’d like to learn more!

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About DataFox

DataFox helps businesses gain control of customer data with CRM Orchestration. Sales, marketing, and investing teams at organizations like UPS, Visa, Twilio, and InsightSquared trust DataFox for the insights they need to identify new business opportunities. DataFox is backed by Goldman Sachs, Green Visor, GV, and Slack. To learn more, visit www.datafox.com.